Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 211, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 January 1922 — Page 12
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TALKING CURE FINE REMEDY FOR TROUBLE Tell Your Tale of Woe to Some One and Get Away From Worry. CURES MENTAL TROUBLE NEW YORK, Jan. 12.—Have you a multitude of troubles? Are you worried? Get out from beneath the load of your troubles by the oral route. Tell your tale of woe to someone. Take the talking cure for the blues. This advice comes all the way from Berlin and from one Dr. Magnus Hlrschfleld, who advocates this “cure’ as an audible ventilation for the pestiferous tenants of the human mind. According to L>r. Hirschtield. your fanciful troubles will vanish and the real ones will diminish if you will but talk them off. However, do not pester friends Talk to someone especially trained to listen to your woes and give you the advice you need. All this may be well enough, but it will seem to the average person that Hr Hirschfields’ theory has a tlaw in that it excludes one talking to one’s friends. Confiding in real friends is a sweet relief. It has always been a boon for the worried man or woman who had a real friend to go to. I)r. Aristine P. Munn-Recht, dean ot women at New York University, a graduate physician and a lecturer on psychology, believes the talking cure for the blues is practical and beneficial, but that one should carry troubles to friends rather than to a paid listener. 88. MUNN-FvECIIT’S OPINIONS. ~ , , . „ "The element of friendship is vital, she Insists. . . . . "If one has two of three friends to listen, no one need carry a load of petty mental cares which, accumulating from day to day, destroy morale and breas ns down completely. “I say two or three friends so one will not be unduly strained. "I can find that many, and so can j anv one else. “Os course, this seems to be one de- ; velopment of the mental ‘catharsis’ of Freud, aud it comes in agreeable form because It places the emphasis on everyday worries and not on ecx troubles. “It is a safe and sane panacea. Os course, tba deep hidden complexes require more profound study. They need a psycho-analyst. “But this ’hot-air treatment, which the Berlin doctor advocates, will prevent new complexes from being formed through constant repression of the emotions and will leave no unpleasant effect. "Emotions expressed through conversation before they take on the element of time are not dangerous. “Let me explain: Suppose someone Is j worried because he has a hard time get-I Gng along with someone in an office or In a class. He talks It out to some | friend. That puts the worry in the past immediately. It is not bottled up for a long period of time, seething and fermenting in the mind, from the date when the trouble began till the person breaks down front thinking about it. I “Talking it out win make no groves In the brain from the worry bubbling with- ' in. I won’t say such repression could cause insanity. That is caused by two things— change in brain structure and change in ideas. Disorders in which ideas change are benefited in some cases by psychoholysis and in others by talking it out. “As for telling things to people, some of them are like vegetables. State anything to them and they never take it in. Often people not leading strenuous lives cannct understand these trials of a busy day. “On the other hand, if two active women, political leaders for instance, should ever begin to tell each other their troubles the day would not be long enough. Both would brenk from the strain. “It Is the petty affairs of life that break folks down, and It Is no effort finding someone to listen to a recital of them. Ever since that time when I was a student at Johns Hopkins I nivrsif>. and sick in a hospital bed, there, and cried out at night something which had bothered me during the day. I have told my worries to people. It will come out In some form, anyhow. "The sympathetic car Is imperative, through. “A wife whose husband gets angry because he wanted toast for breakfast, when Fhe gave him rolls, can tell that to another wife who unsuccessfully served toast to a man who desired pancakes. And so on. ’Bad coffee and hard-boiled eggs that should have been soft are the little worries of many women’s days. “But when this Dr. Uirshfield snys that there should be more sex enlightenment I believe he is at sea. There is undue stress on sex in these matters. In the life of the normal average person it plays a slight role,”
Company Would Sell Its Surplus Energy Approval of a contract to sell alt surplus energy manufactured by the Lake Shore & South Bend Railway Company to the Northern Indiana Gas and Electric Company was asked in a petition filed with the public service commission today. According to the petition, the gas company has agreed to pay the railway company $4,250 a mouth for the service. The current will be transmitted to the gas company over high-tension wires, the petition said. The petition also asks the companies be allowed to consolidate their steam plants, and this, according to tne petition, would elemeuate a large unnecessary expense. The Northern Indiana Gas & Electric Company operates a number of counties in northern Indiana. The contract will be for twenty years, the petition states. Prosecutor Learns of Relative’s Death Prosecutor William F. Evans today received a message stating his grandmother, Mrs. Julia Pascoe, 82. who has been living with her daughter, Mrs. T. E. Evans of Greencastle, Ind., died there about 3 o’clock this morning. Mrs. Pascoe, who recently was stricken with paralysis, formerly lived in New Lexington, Ohio. The body will be taken to New Lexington Saturday morning by Mr. Evans. Mrs. Pasco was the widow of William Pasco who died about forty years ago.
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CATCHES PRIZE FISH OF YEAR
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Mrs. Keith Spalding of Pasadena, photographed with ttie giant tuna fish, weighing 165’s pounds, which she caught (-IT Santa Catalina, Island, Cal. The fish was the largest of its kind landed this past season, and It required two hours and forty-one minutes to subdue it. Captain Malker, of her fishing boat, is shown in the picture, but, aside from assisting to haul the fish aboard, he had no part In landing the monster.
BAKER LET OUT OF JOB WITH CITY SCHOOLS (Continued on Page Two.) comes up for hearing. In view of the fact that Rickes has the backing of the majority faction of the board it is considered a practical certainty that lie will be upheld in bis action. INSPECT SHOPS AT ARSENAL TECH. Following the special meeting the board, with the exception of Bert S. Gadd, made a trip to inspect the new shops and power plant at Arsenal Technical High School, which have just been completed. Awarding of the ash-hauiing contract for the schools and libraries was post poned until a committee consisting of Mr Gadd, Adolph Kmbnrdt and W. I>. Allison can consult with the city authorities and Albert Baker, attorney for the board, as to the possibility of making arrangements for the city to take care of the matter for the toard. Both Mr. Emhardt and President Barry doubted the legality of such an arrangement. The lowest bidder for this work is Andrew Morris, negro. His bid is $4,800 a year for a period of three years. The contract for building a retaining wall at School No. 81, Lincoln and Alabama streets, was awarded to the A. V. Stackhouse Company on a bid of $1,219. Joseph C. Owens was awarded the contract for building the playground at School No. 22, Arizona and Chestnut streets, on a bid of $2,275. The board will hold a special meeting Monday morning at 11 o'clock, after which it will visit the new gymnasium, lunchroom and auditorium at Emmerich Manual Training High School. Vegetable Growers Hold an Election LAFAYETTE, Iml., Jan. 13.—Officers of the Indiana Vegetable Growers Association were re-elected today at the annual mooting of the association held at Purdue University in connection with the Farmers Short Course. They are William Myers of Indianapolis. pr>-el-dent; Albert Morris of Crawfordsville, vice president: H. D. Brown of Purdue, secretary; W. S. Roebuck of Ft. Wayne, treasurer. The association extended an invitation to the national organization to hold its 1022 meeting in Indianapolis next fall.
THIN, FADED HAIR NEEDS ‘‘DANDERINE" TO THICKEN IT
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REPORTS EXCESS SALARIES PAID 2 UNDER JEWETT (Continued Prom Page One.) the section of Genera! Ordinance No. 79 applying to the salaries of the chief engineer and day fireman was not section 2, but was section 5. Section 5 never v>us | amended. Apparently in the belief the amendment had actually raised the salaries, the next city hall maintenance pay roll provided for the increase in the salaries of the chief engineer and day fireman. MAYOR AMENDS AMEN O.MENT. (in May -0, 1920. Mayor Jewett approved an ordinance amending the amendment to section 2, purporting to reduce the salaries of the chief cugincr and day fireman to their original figures j of SIOO and soo. Dspite the fact tills ■ ordinance was passed, the city hall maintenance pay rolls continued to allow the chief engineer salary at the rate of $)25 i ler month and the day fireman at the! rate of S9O per month until the close of the administration lust month, the board of works was Informed. City Attorney James M. Ogden and City Civil Engineer John L. Elliott recom- , mended the board, in assessing property ! for street pavements made under the connecting link law, base the computation of !50 per cent 0? the assessed valuation, I beyond which the law does not permit 1 assessment for such improvement, dtI reetly on the assessed valuation of the Individual properties. The plan of lumping the assessed valuations and then figuring the 50 per cent on a front foot basis, had beeu considered. The board approved the recommendation of Mr. Ogden and Mr. Elliott. Virgil We t, SOI Lexington avenue, was appointed heavy truck driver and Ernest i Cyrus, 1202 East Georgia street, was j given a contract to paint city Insignia upon municipal automobiles at $8 per car. THE MODERN MOTHER faces problems far beyond those of her forbears. She herself must be a much I more competent person, combining in one individual the duties of nurse, cook, 1 teacher and moral instructor. It is no wonder that many conscientious women break under (he strain, and that others : drag out a miserable existence; always ] tired, and yet unable to take a day's j vacation. Such women will find themselves benefited and their burdens made j easier by the use of Lydia E. I’inkham's i Vegetable Compound, which was made for ; suffering women, and does not fall to j relieve them.—Advertisement.
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iiu/itilM'A dailY liiwcii, riiiDAY, JANUARY 13, 1D22.
MURDERED MAN IS IDENTIFIED ! AS HORACE DAW Authorities Investigate Past Life to Find Motive for Crime. KANSAS CITY, Jan. 13.—Police today were probing the past life of Horace Dow, formerly of Janesville, Wis., who was found murdered here last Saturday in the garage on fin estate on which he worked ns gardener, in ass effort to ascertain the motive for the crime. Dow was known here as "Harry Donelson,” but his body was identified late yesterday by his wife, who came from Janesville. Mrs. Dow, a little woman, gray-haired aud careworn, said her husband disappeared April 28,'last, aud that she had never received a word from him. His brother, the Rev. E. R. Dow of Wheaton, 111., is a widely known evange-, list in Wisconsin aud other mid-western States, she said. For several months Dow had been working as a gardener, living alone in quarters above the garage. So iur as is known ho had no enemies. He was shot by a .45-caliber bullet. A bloody print of a hand on the door of the garage was a clew left by the slayer upon which tlio police aro working. MAY AGREE ON ‘DIRT FARMER Harding and Agricultural ‘Bloc’ Expected to Harmonize. WASHINGTON, Jan. 13. — An agreement betwen President Harding and members of the Senate "agricultural bloc.” with respect to the appointment of a “dirt” fanner on the Federal Reserve Board, is expected to be reached before the Senate convenes Monday, according to an announcement today by Senator Simmons, Democrat, North Carolina, following a conference at the White House. % • It is understood changes will be made in the "dirt farmer” bill offered by Senator Smith, Democrat, South Carolina, thgt the men will not apply to the next appointment to be made to the board. CHINESE PORT WELCOMES ALL Agreement Is Regarded as Japanese Defeat. WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—The port or Tslng-Tao and the entire leased area oi ivlao Chow, In Shantung province, will be opened to equal entry for ali nations on a basis of equality, under au agreement reached here today between the Chinese and Japanese delegates In the armament conference. The agreement wan reached In tlio private conversations between the delegations over the proposed return of the Shantung province to China and Is regarded as a victory for the Chinese as the reopening of the area Is to bo carried out under the Chinese supervision. Approves Plans for New Veteran School Washington, Jan. 13. —President Harding has approved plans of the veteran’s bureau for the establishment of n nautical training school for disabled veterans it was announced today by Colonel Forbes, director of vho bureau. Sites at Baltimore, Jacksonville, Newport News, Boston and two points in South Carolina are under consideration for the location of the school. AUTHORIZES SECCUrTIES SALE. The Indiana Ftillty Company was authorized to sell $92,100 worth ot general mortgages by the public service commission today. The money derived from the sale of the securities which are to lie sold at not less than 80 per cent of par, nre to be used for (lie retirement of outstanding bonds, and for tho making of plant extensions.
Our Great Pre-Inventory Sale of Men’s Fine Shoes and Oxfords Every Pair Reduced—No Regular Prices
MAROTT’S
In black kid, black calf and tan calf. Conservative models — Regular price SB.OO, jt n sale price Regular price $7.00, ({*£* sale price p3.OU Regular price $6.50, Of| sale price Regular price $6.00, QA sale price tjUi.O'L? Stacy-Adams’ and Stetson’s High Shoes and Oxfords, in the various shades of tan Russian calf, black calf and black kid; all the new snappy styles, as well as the more conservative shapes; regular price $14.00, (Kt -S OA sale price fTLbU French Shriner & Urner’s High Shoes and Oxfords, in black kid, black calf and tan Russian calf; regular price $13.00, djf AA A rice ’.. .$1
BUY SHOES AT A SHOE SHOP
Store Hours—B A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Open Saturday Evenings Until 9 o’clock
SHANK TO GIVE HIGH CHAIRS TO BABY NAMESAKES M ayor Limits Number to 100 — First Claim Comes From Official Family. •TH give a high chair to each of the first hundred babies named after me,” remarked Mayor Samuel Lewis Shank today as he marked down the name of Samuel Lewis Shank Kemvorthy for the honor. Young Kenworthy, aged 1 day, has the added distinction of being the first youngster liorn to a member of the how official family. He is the son of Mr. and '7‘rs. Hendricks Kenworthy, 318 South Emerson avenue.. Mr. Kenworthy is track elevation auditor for the board of public works. To add to the official character of the Kenworthy’s heir’tj appearance on earth the attending physician was Dr. M. ,T. Spencer, Democratic member of the board of public works. , Mr. Shank also announced that he is going to start the organization of a widows’ and widowers' society with the mayor's office as headquarters. "I want all the widows and widowers who are interested in the society to send their names to my office. When we get enough we’ll call a meeting of them and let them'look each other over. The mayor will marry tree any couple that pairs off. I never did think a fellow did any good running around single and the widows al! would bo better off if they were married again. WILL CELEBRATE DRY BIRTHDAY’ Marion County W. C. T. U. to Observe Anniversary. A meeting celebrating the second anniversary of national prohibition will tio held under the auspices of the Marlon County Women's Christian Temperance Union at the old Empire Theater, Monday evening. Jan. lti, at 7:13 o’clock It was announced today. Several prohibition authorities will address tho meeting. Among those who will speak are Bert Morgan, Federal prohibition director of ludtana, who will speak on “Take Time to Be Patriotic," and C. F. Rogers, a member of the national prohibition (lying squadron, who will speak on “Law Enforcement." "The enforcement of tho prohibition law should lie the chief concern, of not only the Women's Christian Temperance Union, but every' law-abiding citizen," declared Mrs. M. N. Bronson president of the Marlon County society, “This is a good opportunity for tho law-abid-ing element to bo heard.” The Newsboys Band will provide music, and the audience will sing “America,” followed by the reading of scripture and tho fourteenth Psalm. Prayer will bo led by the itv. E. H. Kberhart, assistant superintendent of the Wheeler Rescue Mission.
Dancing at the Claypool In the Atrium from 9 to 12 m. —Beginning— Saturday Evening, Jan. 14th Cover Charge 50 Cents Per Person Table d’ Ilote Dinner served in the Chateau Case every •Sunday from 6toßp. m. Price $1.50 per plate.
SPECIALS w np\ Dobbs Winter Oxford* and High I Shoes, In brogues and semi- yA brogues; black and tan grain and (ff 1 tan Russia calf, wing tips and |f J fancy tips, soft toes, double soles, Regular price SIO.OO, JmTZt, wj sale price ..l OO*UU Regular price $9.00, orv Regular price $8.50, qa * /GZgssjjjkW\ gale price SD>OU Jrf / Regular price SB.OO, d/* ja sale price Regular price $7.00, rA m sale price tpj.UU J|//• Bostonian High Shoes, in black \ calf, black kid, brown kid and tan \ Russian calf; regular d*n ne A price $lO, sale price Su.UU $6.40
nkuYctl Shoe w eoauukiuu 1 15
OZARK WILDS SPANISH GOLD HIDING PLACE $2,500,000 Reported Secreted In Arkansas White River Country. DENVER, Colo., Jan. 12.—1n a charted cache In the wilds of tho Ozark Mountains of Arkansas there is buried some $2,500,000 in Spanish gold. So says Anthony Fennlnger, who Is organizing a company ju Denver to search for the hidden treasure. Fennlnger professes to have discovered the key to tho hiding place of the gold, which, he says, was buried in the White River country more than 150 years ago. The key to the location of the cache was discovered by accident, says Fenninger. “I knew nothing of tho buried treasure until I went to Eden’s Bluff on a squirrel hunting trip last fall.” says Fennlnger. “Across the river from the bluff I stumbled over a stone covered with strange hieroglypnics. I scraped the dirt and moss from the inscriptions and called tho attention of a native to the find. native told of an extended search that had been made by the Spanish Government for the buried bullion twenty-two years ago. Searching parties, he said, had been covering the country every year since the Spaniards left.” The treasure, Fenninger says, was buried by a party of settlers to keep it from falling into the hands of Indians. Tho settlers later were murdered by the aborigines. “A party of native Arkansans is supposed to have discovered the tunnel to the cache ten years ago.” Fenninger says. "They abandoned an effort to reopen the shaf, after one member of the party was killed by a slide.” Several prominent Denver men have signified their Intentions to accompany Fennlnger on his search next spring. COOPERATION EFFECTS SAVING Railroad Head Explains to U. S. Body. WASHINGTON, Jan. 13. Savings amounting to thousands of dollars hove been effected on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad through the cooperation of employes and officers, 11. 12. Byram, president of the line, told the Interstate Commerce Commission today in its investigation of tho transportation problem. Economies have been practiced In many directions. Byrain said. Among tho savings ho called attention to was tho conservation of fuel whereby the average number of pounds of coal required to move a. locomotive one mile in the freight servico' was 220 pounds for the first ten months of 1921, compared with 250 pounds for the year 1919.
EIGHT FLOORS OF SHOES
LAWYER JURORS TAKE 5 MINUTES When Told Dinner Depended On Verdict. COLUMBUS, Ohio, Jan. 13.—A jury, n)ade up of twelve local attorneys, decided a will contest here. When the case involving a contest over the will of the late George W. Bigelow was taken up Common Pleas Judge Daniel Sowers found the regular Jurymen had left the courthouse. The judge ordered his bailiff to impress into service any dozen men he found inside the courthouse. The bailiff found twelve lawyers in the corridors. Although the law exempts them from jury service, they waived their rights and were sworn in. Deputy Probate Judge Frank E. Powell was the only witness. He identified tho will. The Jury then retired. Nearly an hour bad expired when the jurors Informed the court of their inability to reach a verdict and asked for permission to go to dinner. When Informed they must forego cat- ! ing until they returned a verdict the dozen attorneys consumed just five minutes In agreeing that the will is valid. Judge Sowers then instructed his bailiff to pass the cigars.
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FEBRUARY Brunswick Records On Sale Saturday OPERATIC loO4a f Ladonna A mobile (Woman Is Fickle) —From Rigoletto, Aot 1.00 l m (Verdi) Tenor, In Italian Mario Chamloe CONCERT 10036 ( 1.00 |My Laddje (Tronbetzkoy-Thayer) Soprano.. Florence Easton 13031 ( FU Forget Von (Barns-Ball) Tenor Theo. Karl* 1.25 ) The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise (Lockhart-Seitz) Tenor * Theo. Karla —.. f Listen to the Mocking Bird (Winner) Bird Voices by Margaret i i>A "S McKro. Soprano Marie Tiffany *■ v L Ma Curly-Headed Babby (Clutsam) Soprano... .Marie Tiffany INSTRUMENTAL 30025 I Kameimol-Ostrow (Stony Island) Op. 10 (Rubinstein) Plano--1.50 1 forte Solo .Leopold Godowsky *0024 | I.a Capri cl euse (Elgar) Violin 5010...... Bronislaw Huberman r Autumn and Winter (Glazounow) Violin, ’Cello and Plano 18032 -< Elshuco. Trio 1225 1 Swedish Folk Song (Swendsen) Violin, ’Cello and Piano _ / Elshuco Trio 50i5 I Arlfsienne—Mlnnet (8izet1.............. Vessella’s Italian Band LOO | Arl&denne— larandole (Bizet)........Vessella’s Italian Band r Velma (Rosebrookl Saxophone Solo Rudy Wledoeft 8071 J Saxophone lantasie (Rosebrook) Saxophone Solo 85c l Rudy Wledoeft POPULAR 8166 ) Sally in Onr Alley (Carey-Smith) Strand Male Quartet 85c J Bells of Sh&ndon (Mahoney-Nevtn) Strand Male Quartet 2172 I Georgia Rose (SuHlvan-Flynn-Rosenthal) Tenor. James Craven 85c / * Want My Mammy (Wehner-Breau) Baritone... Ernest Hare f I’m Just Too Mean To Cry (Parish-Young-Squires) Tenor •Jl" J Al Bernard with Carl Fenton’s Orchestra 85c ( Brother Low Down (Bernard-Briers) Tenor with Orchestra Al Bernard with Carl Fenton's Orchestra r Mandy *o’ Me (Kalmar-Conrad-Motzan) Tenor 2168 J Billy Jones and Male Trio 85c j Dapper Dan (Brown-Von Tilzer) Tenor and Baritone *• Billy Jones and Ernest Hare FOR DANCING ( Stars—Fox Trot (Alden) Isham Jones’ Orchestra 5072 ) W hat’ll You Do—Fox Trot (Isham Jones) 1.00 ) Isham Jones’ Orchestra fluTm—Fox Trot (Morgan) From "Greenwich Village Follies” Gene Rodemich’s Orchestra April Showers —Fox Trot (Silvers) From "Bombo” Gene Rodemich’s Orchestra r I’m Cuckoo Over Von—Fox Trot (Mitchell-Brooks) 2174 3 Bennie Krueger's Orchestra 85c / Bow-Wow Blues—Fox Trot (Frlend-Osborne) Bennie Krueger's Orchestra f Song of Love —Waltz. From “Blossom Time” •17V J Carl Fenton’s Orchestra 85c 1 When Shall Wo Meet Again—Waltz (Whiting) Carl Fenton’s Orchestra r The Sheik—Fox Trot (Ted Snyder) oi-g ) Rudy Wledoeft’s C’ lfornlans ~Bsc f Broken Toy—Fox Trot (Flatow-Magine) 1 Rudy Wiedoeft’s Californians r Ka-Ln-A Fox Trot (Jerome-Kern) From “Good Morning. *l7O J Dearie” •' Carl Fenton's Orchestra ivn I Blue Danube Blue* Fox Trot (Jerome-Kem) Introducing k “Toddle” from “Good Morning, Dearie” Carl Fenton’s Orchestra .... f Leave Me With a Smile—Fox Trot (Burtnett) 8177 J Car! Fenton's Orrhsstm 850 L W’eeo No More My Mammy—Fox Trot (Pollack) Carl Fenton’s Orchestra ■ Opposite \ j 124 North Keith’s Psnn. St. Records and A Store Phonographs and More
GOLD IMPORTS BREAKRECORDS Yellow Metal Inflow During 1921 Greatest in U. S. History. WASHINGTON, Jan. 15. —Hold imports Into the United States were 50 per cent higher in 1321 than In 1920, and greater than In any previous year in the country’s history, according to figures made public by the Commerce DepArtment today. The imports last year totalled S69L 267,448. The exports of gold In 1021 totalled $23,680,043, which was less than one-twelfth of the Imports in 1920. Gold Imports during the month ■■ December, 1921, were $31,634,978, the lowest amount for any month of the year. Schedules Revised WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—Complete new tariff schedules embodying demands >t the Republican “farm bloc” of the Senate were presented to the Senate Finance Committee today by Senator Gooding, Republican, Idaho. The proposed schedules provide duties on all western products, ranging from livestock and grains to fruit and dairy products.
